Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
Background: Research priority setting in health care has historically been done by expert health care providers and researchers and has not involved patients, family or the public. Survivors & family members have been particularly absent from this process in the field of resuscitation resear...
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Format: | Article |
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Elsevier
2021-09-01
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Series: | Resuscitation Plus |
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Online Access: | http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666520421000734 |
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Article |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
K.N. Dainty M.B. Seaton K. Cowan A. Laupacis P. Dorian M. Douma J. Garner J. Goldstein D. Shire D. Sinclair C. Thurlow C. Vaillancourt |
spellingShingle |
K.N. Dainty M.B. Seaton K. Cowan A. Laupacis P. Dorian M. Douma J. Garner J. Goldstein D. Shire D. Sinclair C. Thurlow C. Vaillancourt Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership Resuscitation Plus Research priority setting Out of hospital cardiac arrest James Lind Alliance Resuscitation Patient and family engagement |
author_facet |
K.N. Dainty M.B. Seaton K. Cowan A. Laupacis P. Dorian M. Douma J. Garner J. Goldstein D. Shire D. Sinclair C. Thurlow C. Vaillancourt |
author_sort |
K.N. Dainty |
title |
Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership |
title_short |
Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership |
title_full |
Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership |
title_fullStr |
Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership |
title_full_unstemmed |
Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership |
title_sort |
partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a james lind alliance priority setting partnership |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Resuscitation Plus |
issn |
2666-5204 |
publishDate |
2021-09-01 |
description |
Background: Research priority setting in health care has historically been done by expert health care providers and researchers and has not involved patients, family or the public. Survivors & family members have been particularly absent from this process in the field of resuscitation research and specifically adult out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). As such, we sought to conduct a priority setting exercise in partnership with survivors, lay responders and their families in order to ensure that their priorities were visible. We partnered with the James Lind Alliance (UK) and used their commonly used consensus methodology for Public Priority Setting Partnerships (PSPs) to identify research priorities that reflected the perspectives of all stakeholders. Methods: We used two rounds of public and health care professional surveys to create the initial priority lists. The initial survey collected open-ended questions while the second round consolidated the list of initial questions into a refined list for prioritization. This was done by reviewing existing evidence and thematic categorization by the multi-disciplinary steering committee. An in-person consensus workshop was conducted to come to consensus on the top ten priorities from all perspectives. The McMaster PPEET tool was used to measure engagement. Results: The initial survey yielded more than 425 responses and 1450 “questions” from survivors and family members (18%), lay responders, health care providers and others. The second survey asked participants to rank a short list of 125 questions. The final top 25 questions were brought to the in-person meeting, and a top ten were selected through the JLA consensus process. The final list of top ten questions included how to improve the rate of lay responder CPR, what interventions used at the scene of an arrest can improve resuscitation and survival, how survival can be improved in rural areas of Canada, what resuscitation medications are most effective, what care patient’s family members need, what post-discharge support is needed for survivors, how communication should work for everyone involved with a cardiac arrest, what factors best predict neurologically intact survival, whether biomarkers/genetic tests are effective in predicting OHCA and more research on the short and long-term psycho-social impacts of OHCA on survivors. The PPEET showed overwhelmingly positive results for the patient and family engagement experience during the final workshop. Conclusions: This inclusive research priority setting provides essential information for those doing resuscitation research internationally. The results provide a guide for priority areas of research and should drive our community to focus on questions that matter to survivors and their families in our work. In particular the Canadian Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium will be incorporating the top ten list into its strategic plan for the future. |
topic |
Research priority setting Out of hospital cardiac arrest James Lind Alliance Resuscitation Patient and family engagement |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666520421000734 |
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doaj-a162f95fa7cd4bc5b69accc9448100352021-09-13T04:14:55ZengElsevierResuscitation Plus2666-52042021-09-017100148Partnering with survivors & families to determine research priorities for adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A James Lind Alliance Priority Setting PartnershipK.N. Dainty0M.B. Seaton1K. Cowan2A. Laupacis3P. Dorian4M. Douma5J. Garner6J. Goldstein7D. Shire8D. Sinclair9C. Thurlow10C. Vaillancourt11North York General Hospital and the Institute of Health Policy Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Corresponding author at: Office of Research & Innovation, North York General Hospital, 4001 Leslie Street, Suite LE-140, Toronto, Ontario, M2K 3E1, Canada.North York General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaJames Lind Alliance, London,UKLi Ka Shing Knowledge Institute and Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaUnity Health Toronto and Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaUniversity of Dublin, Dublin, IrelandFamily member, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaDalhousie Emergency Health Service, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaSurvivor, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaIWK Health Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaSurvivor, Vancouver, British Columbia, CanadaOttawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, CanadaBackground: Research priority setting in health care has historically been done by expert health care providers and researchers and has not involved patients, family or the public. Survivors & family members have been particularly absent from this process in the field of resuscitation research and specifically adult out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). As such, we sought to conduct a priority setting exercise in partnership with survivors, lay responders and their families in order to ensure that their priorities were visible. We partnered with the James Lind Alliance (UK) and used their commonly used consensus methodology for Public Priority Setting Partnerships (PSPs) to identify research priorities that reflected the perspectives of all stakeholders. Methods: We used two rounds of public and health care professional surveys to create the initial priority lists. The initial survey collected open-ended questions while the second round consolidated the list of initial questions into a refined list for prioritization. This was done by reviewing existing evidence and thematic categorization by the multi-disciplinary steering committee. An in-person consensus workshop was conducted to come to consensus on the top ten priorities from all perspectives. The McMaster PPEET tool was used to measure engagement. Results: The initial survey yielded more than 425 responses and 1450 “questions” from survivors and family members (18%), lay responders, health care providers and others. The second survey asked participants to rank a short list of 125 questions. The final top 25 questions were brought to the in-person meeting, and a top ten were selected through the JLA consensus process. The final list of top ten questions included how to improve the rate of lay responder CPR, what interventions used at the scene of an arrest can improve resuscitation and survival, how survival can be improved in rural areas of Canada, what resuscitation medications are most effective, what care patient’s family members need, what post-discharge support is needed for survivors, how communication should work for everyone involved with a cardiac arrest, what factors best predict neurologically intact survival, whether biomarkers/genetic tests are effective in predicting OHCA and more research on the short and long-term psycho-social impacts of OHCA on survivors. The PPEET showed overwhelmingly positive results for the patient and family engagement experience during the final workshop. Conclusions: This inclusive research priority setting provides essential information for those doing resuscitation research internationally. The results provide a guide for priority areas of research and should drive our community to focus on questions that matter to survivors and their families in our work. In particular the Canadian Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium will be incorporating the top ten list into its strategic plan for the future.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666520421000734Research priority settingOut of hospital cardiac arrestJames Lind AllianceResuscitationPatient and family engagement |